Clarkson 3 - Dartmouth 3 (OT)

Friday, January 18, 2002

Attendance: 3,318

Officials: Fred Campatelli (R), Tom Cronin, Charles Sisson

Player perspective: Nick Boucher

Game shot charts: period 1 period 2 period 3 Overtime

Box Score


By Dave Sherzer

HANOVER, N.H. -- It's a toss up.

Dartmouth entered Friday night's game with Clarkson looking to make a statement at home against the defending ECAC regular-season champions.

The Big Green took three separate leads but couldn't seal the deal, settling for a 3-3 tie against the extraordinarily physical Golden Knights in front of 3,318 at Thompson Arena.

Mike Murray, Mike Maturo and Chris Baldwin scored the goals for Dartmouth (8-7-2, 5-3-2 ECAC), which received outstanding goaltending from Nick Boucher, especially late.

"I thought Boucher played great in goal," said head coach Bob Gaudet. "He really had a huge effort for us.

"Overall," Gaudet added, "I thought it was a very good game. Our guys played well. That's a good hockey team we played against. I thought we battled and had our chances. We'd like to get two points, but we'll take the tie."

For Clarkson (9-7-4, 5-0-3 ECAC), the tie is a mixed blessing. The Golden Knights remain unbeaten in league play but also winless overall on the road (0-4-3).

Lacking a flashy superstar forward, the well-coached Golden Knights displayed punishing physical play for the full 65 minutes, allowing them to dominate possession time and get several good looks at the Dartmouth net.

"I don't think we're very effective if we aren't physical," said Clarkson coach Mark Morris, now in his 14th season behind the bench. "We aren't blessed with the headline players that we've had in the past, so goals are few and far between. We have to play solid defensively and if we play the body, we're going to be effective."

In the Dartmouth net, Boucher was at his characteristic best, making up for a lack of prowess when he ventured outside of the crease by being very tough to beat when he was in it.

Boucher finished the game with 36 saves, including eight big ones in the third period and three in overtime.

"Clarkson had some pretty glorious opportunities," the junior netminder said. "There were a couple from right around the area in front of the net. I think those are the kind of saves we're going to need. To come up big like that is a big confidence boost."

Dartmouth's first goal was solid evidence that fans should show up on time. With Clarkson looking to set up a play behind its net, Gillings and Maturo stole away the puck and Maturo centered it to Murray, who roofed it just fifteen seconds into the game.

After Murray's goal, the game took on a physical nature and settled into a rhythm. Clarkson outshot Dartmouth, 13-7, in the first period, but both goaltenders were strong.

The action heated up in the middle frame, as the teams alternated goals.

The Golden Knights tied it at one on the power-play goal at the 3:15 mark. Jones lit the lamp from the top of the right circle, sending in a shot that deflected off a Dartmouth player.

The Big Green responded less than three minutes later with a Maturo goal, as the co-captain one-timed a pass from Gillings behind the net. Maturo's goal, combined with an earlier assist, gave him 23 points in 17 games.

The teams traded goals late in the period, as Carosa's game-tier at the 13:02 mark was followed by a Baldwin one-timer for Dartmouth at 16:51.

Baldwin nearly had another in the waning seconds of the frame, apparently converting with a delayed penalty coming against the Golden Knights. Baldwin's goal was disallowed, however, as the officials ruled that Walsh had had possession when the puck skimmed his pads an instant earlier.

"A play like that is unfortunate," Boucher said. "Obviously, the puck went in and legitimately, it should have been a goal. But you can only hope that...if it happens to you, the ref will blow the whistle just as fast as he did for them."

The third period got underway with a Bahen goal for Clarkson at the 3:43 mark, but after that, the goaltenders went unsolved. The Golden Knights seemed to have the best scoring opportunities in the third period, but Boucher maintained the tie.

Each team took three shots in the extra session.

"Tonight, we had some unbelievable opportunities to put the game away, but their goalie came up big," Morris said. "Both goalies were pretty strong, for that matter, but it was a good college hockey game. The fans got their money's worth."

The Big Green returns to action Saturday night when St. Lawrence pays a visit. Clarkson, meantime, will have a good chance for that first road win when they play last-place Vermont.


Statistics

Scoring by Period
Team 1 2 3 OT Total
Clarkson
0
2
1
0
3
Dartmouth
1
2
0
0
3

Power Play Goals/Power Play Opportunities

Clarkson: 1 for 5

Dartmouth: 0 for 4

Goals
Period Team Goal Assists Time
1 D Murray Maturo, Gillings 0:15
 
2 C Jones O'Flaherty, Poapst 3:15 (PPG)
2 D Maturo Gillings, Murray 5:27
2 C Carosa unassisted 13:02
2 D Baldwin Taliercio, Nardella 16:51
3 C Bahen Edwards, Manzano 3:43
 
OT no goals


Saves by Period
Player-Team Min. 1 2 3 OT Total
Walsh (C) 65:00
6
8
9
3
26
Boucher (D) 65:00 13 13 7 3 36


Penalties
Period Team Player Penalty Time
1
D
Byrne cross-checking 6:37
1 C Reid charging 7:11
1 D Herrington hitting after whistle 17:11
1 C Edwards inerference 19:49
  
2 D Hontvet slashing 2:04
2 D Taliercio slashing 5:30
2 C Poapst slashing 5:30
2 D Wheelihan hooking 10:29
2 D Byrne interference 17:50
2 C Scuderi hooking 19:36
  
3 C Edwards interference 14:48
 
OT D Gillings hitting after whistle 4:52
OT C Poapst hitting after whistle 4:52

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last updated: Wed, Jan 23, 2002; 2:19 am